Zachry Kincaid

Time, if nothing else, makes a veteran out of all of us, a veteran of one thing or another. I’d like to think my career is marked by mostly vocational work - people work - more than trying to keep a roof over my head, let alone a shelter for my wife (now of 30 years) and our three boys (now grown up).

I’m a filmmaker and writer now, the shadows of both go back a ways. For example, in high school (early 90s) I put together a video yearbook, and I went on to college to major in English Literature and then to seminary for a degree in church history.

Along the way, I started to work in marketing and communications. I was privileged to work with Rich Mullins, Steven Curtis Chapman, and others. I also began to work with education and film: Disney’s first Narnia film, United 93, and Rocky come to mind. As a result of being in the right place at the right time (nothing more than God’s providence), I edited three books of C.S. Lewis’s work for HarperOne: a devotional for Lent, a book about prayer, and one about living the Christian life. I also have a children’s book I hope to publish, called Roadsign Gospel. It tells the story Luke’s Gospel using road signs as guides.

There’s more. The Matthew’s House Project is where I mostly write - commentary on the world, devotional material, and a very slow going series on the Psalms.

I started a film company in 2016 called Redhill Town Films. We do a lot of NGO and education work in the DC area. We also try to present our own projects to like-minded investors. Currently, we are working on a Revolutionary War drama series that accents faith. It’s called An Appeal to Heaven and we shot a short pilot last August. We are also beginning a documentary project called “Stories of Conversion” that showcases where Jesus is changing lives, one by one, all over the world. We just shot several stories in Berlin, the heart of atheism, to begin.

Finally, Work Out Your Faith is a non-profit just now beginning to walk after some years of me tinkering with an idea to help alleviate the dreadful reality that the church doesn’t know those who have shaped and formed her from its beginning.

I know. All over the place, but vocation nonetheless. I hope you’ll click on the links above to find out less about me and more about what I hope I’m busy about doing - finding joy in the journey.